Friday, August 22, 2025

The Centenary of Honor Blackman's Birth

It was 100 years ago on this date that Honor Blackman was born in Canning Town, Essex. At least in the United States, I am guessing that she is probably best known as Pussy Galore in the James Bond movie Goldfinger. As for myself (not to mention the United Kingdom), she may be best remembered as John Steed's partner in fighting crime, Mrs. Cathy Gale, on the classic TV show The Avengers. Of course, long-time readers of this blog know that The Avengers is my favourite TV show of all time. While I would not see Honor Blackman in The Avengers until I was an adult (series three and four of The Avengers weren't available in the US until the Nineties, it is primarily because of that role that she numbers among my favourite actresses.

As to the first place I probably ever saw Honor Blackman, it was also the first movie I can remember watching all the way through, Jason and the Argonauts (1963). In the movie, Honor Blackman played the goddess Hera, who plays a game of wits against her husband Zeus (Peter Ustinov) with regard to the hero Jason (Todd Armstrong, dubbed by Tim Turner). Honor Blackman impressed me as a four-year-old in the role and she impresses me still. While others have played the role of Hera, when I picture her in my head it is still Honor Blackman I see.

While I have fond memories of Jason and the Argonauts (1963) from my childhood, I also have fond memories of Goldfinger (1964). Even as a kid I was a big fan of spy dramas, having watched shows like The Avengers and The Man From U.N.C.L.E., so I was naturally drawn to the James Bond movies. As a kid, my favourite was Goldfinger, in part because of Honor Blackman. It was Honor Blackman's talent that made Pussy Galore one of the coolest women in a Bond movie ever. She was smart. She could fight. She could fly a plane. Although I didn't realise it at the time, in many respects Pussy Galore was Cathy Gale transplanted from The Avengers to a James Bond movie.

As a kid, I also remember Honor Blackman in the Columbo episode "Dagger of the Mind." In the episode, she plays Lillian Stanhope, one half of a Shakespearean acting duo with Nicholas Frame (Richard Basehart). 'Dagger of the Mind" is one of the weakest Columbo episodes and has more than its share of flaws, but I do enjoy Honor Blackman and Richard Basehart as Lillian Stanhope and Nicholas Frame. I will admit that they were over the top, but it seems fitting given they are actors who are apparently always acting and are both off their trolleys. 

I wouldn't see A Night to Remember (1958) until I was a teen or a young adult, but I was impressed with Honor Blackman as Mrs. Liz Lucas in the film. It is not a big part, but Honor Blackman does well with it, playing a passenger on the Titanic who does not want to leave her husband when the ship is sinking. Honor Blackman plays the part well, and grants Liz Lucas the sort of dignity one might expect of an upper-crust British woman of the time.

I would be an adult when I first saw the second and third series of The Avengers, and while Mrs. Emma Peel (Diana Rigg) remains my favourite of John Steed's partners, I have adored Mrs. Cathy Gale ever since I first saw her. Indeed, there would not be an Emma Peel without Cathy Gale. There also wouldn't have been a Honey West of the TV show of the same name. While Honey West was based on the novels by Gloria and Forest Fickling, the television version of Honey was inspired by Cathy Gale on The Avengers. Quite simply, Cathy Gale was the first female action hero in the history of either British or American television. She held a doctorate in archaeology, was an expert photographer, and was skilled in both the use of firearms and the martial art of judo. Cathy Gale would prove enormously popular with audiences, and it would be her partnership with John Steed that would make The Avengers a success.

I have no doubt that this was because of Honor Blackman's enormous talent. She was entirely convincing in the role. She endowed Cathy with intelligence, class, and charm. She made it fully believable for Cathy Gale to be at home serving tea or fencing. When Honor Blackman died five years ago, in the United Kingdom it was always the role of Cathy Gale that was cited in the headlines and ledes of new stories, and it was with good reason. She was remarkable in the role.

Of course, Honor Blackman played many more roles throughout her career. She appeared in movies from The Secret of My Success (1965) to To the Devil a Daughter (1976) to Bridget Jones's Diary (2001) and TV shows from Danger Man to The Saint to Doctor Who. Honor Blackman had an enormous talent and could play a wide array of roles. She was Cathy Gales, Pussy Galore, and Hera, but she was also so much more. 

Thursday, August 21, 2025

Vintage Fall Television Promos

I watch so little broadcast network television any more that I don't know if promos for television shows debuting on the fall are as big as they once were, but when I was growing up and well into my adult they would be ubiquitous from about late July to the start of the fall television season in September. And, of course, in addition to these individual commercials for new shows debuting in the fall, in the Sixties, Seventies, and Eighties each network would often have their own fall preview special in early September that would give viewers a look ahead at the new television shows. Here are a few television promos from the late Twentieth and early Twenty First Centuries.

Star Trek

From this promo for Star Trek. it seems fairly clear that NBC's promotional department did not quite know what to make of the show. The advertisement makes Star Trek sound less like an optimistic look at the future than a horror show The announcer on this promo sounds familiar to me, but I cannot place who it is. I seem to recall the voice from movie trailers from the era.

M*A*S*H

In contrast to the promo for Star Trek six years earlier, this promo for M*A*S*H is very upbeat. Of course, at the time no one, not even the producers, may have realised that M*A*S*H would become a somewhat more serious comedy drama examining war and the human condition, but one of the greatest shows of all time, hence the emphasis on laughs. 

Cheers

Given how brief this promo is and how it tells nothing about the show, I have to think this, the first promo ever for Cheers, was teaser more than anything else. One would think they would have used one of the cast from the show, like Ted Danson or Shelley Long, but not only was this woman not part of the Cheers cast, but I have no idea who she is.

Eerie Indiana

I don't think this was actually a fall promo for Eerie Indiana, but more a coming up next on NBC promo. Still, it captures the show pretty well and I seem to remember the actual fall promos being pretty similar. 

Firefly


Many fans of Firefly probably remember the notorious "Walking in the Sun" fall promo that described Mal Reynolds (Nate Fillion) as a "whacked out space cowboy," Wash (Alan Tudyk), the pilot of the ship Serenity on the show, was described as a "flighty pilot," and so on. I have to think it was the absolute worst fall promo for any TV show ever. Unfortunately, I can't post it for you, as it appears to have been wiped from the Web. Here then is a somewhat more serious promo more fitting the show.

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Vintage Back to School Ads

This week the kids in my county are going back to school. This boggles my mind as I can remember when I attended school, we did not go back to school until the Wednesday before Labour Day. Even then, that first Wednesday back was only half a day. I never particularly liked school, so memories of going back to school do not invoke a good deal of nostalgia in me. While I am not nostalgic about the yearly return to school as a kid, I do have some nostalgia for the back-to-school ads that would start coming out in July and August. By today's standards, some of them would be rather bizarre. Here then are some vintage ads (most of which are from well before I started attending school).

Today smoking is considered objectionable even for adults, let alone college students. This was not the case in 1941, when Old Gold could target college students in their ads and no one would even bat an eye.


I grew up on a farm, so I never rode my bike to school, although a lot of my friends who lived in town did. This AMF Roadmaster ad from 1953 then makes a lot of sense.


An ad from First National Bank in 1969, encouraging parents to pay for their kids' school supplies using MasterCharge. MasterCharge would change its name to MasterCard ten years later, in 1979.


From 1970, an ad for the Jeep Wagoneer. While SUVs seem to be the family vehicle of choice now, in 1970 most people would prefer a sedan or station wagon. This Jeep ad obviously sought to change that.


An ad from 1986, for Dayton Hudson and the May Company. Both companies owned department stores, which were dying out in the Eighties but were once commonly found in the United States. Anyway, to me this ad definitely screams, "Eighties."

Monday, August 18, 2025

The Late Great Terence Stamp

Terence Stamp, famed for his roles in such movies as Billy Budd (1962), Superman II (1980), and The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994), died yesterday, August 17 2025, at the age of 87.

Terence Henry Stamp was born on July 22 1938 in Stepney, London. His father was often away from home for long stretches of time as part of the Merchant Navy, so that he was mostly raised by his mother, grandmother, and aunts. His desire to become an actor began when he was three years old and his mother took him to see Beau Geste (1939). Because of that film, he became a fan of both Gary Cooper and movies in general. When he was older he became a fan of James Dean.

After he left school, Terence Stamp worked at various advertising agencies in London. He won a scholarship to Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art, and he began performing at various repertory theatres. At the time his roommate was fellow actor Michael Caine. It was also at this time that he became friends with Peter O'Toole. Terence Stamp toured the United Kingdom in The Long and the Short and the Tall in 1959 and then in 1960 appeared in This Year, Next Year at the Vaudeville Theatre on the West End. He made his television debut in an episode of Spy-Catcher in 1960.

Terence Stamp made his movie debut in Billy Budd (1962), for which he was nominated for the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor and the BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles. At the Cannes Film Festival, he won the award for Best Actor in The Collector (1965). In the Sixties, Terence Stamp also appeared in the movies Term of Trial (1962), Modesty Blaise (1966), Far from the Madding Crowd (1967), Poor Cow (1967), Blue (1968), the "Toby Dammit" segment of Histoires extraordinaires (1968), Teorema (1968), and The Mind of Mr. Soames (1970). He appeared on Broadway in Alfie, and turned down the role for the movie version (which his former roommate Michael Caine ultimately played).

In the Seventies, Terence Stamp appeared in the films Una stagione all'inferno (1971), Hu-Man (1975), Divina Creatura (1975), Striptease (1977),. Black-Out (1977), Superman (1978), Meetings with Remarkable Man (1979), Amo non amo (1979), and Superman II (1980). He appeared on television in the TV movie The Thief of Baghdad. He appeared on stage in Dracula at the Shaftesbury Theatre on the West End and The Lady from the Sea at the Roundhouse on the West End.

In the Eighties, Terence Stamp appeared in the movies Misterio en isla de los monstruos (1981), Morte in Vaticano (1982), The Hit (1984), The Company of Wolves (1984), Link (1986), Legal Eagles (1986), Hud (1986), The Sicilian (1987), Wall Street (1987), Young Guns (1988), Alien Nation (1988), Genuine Risk (1990), and Stranger in the House (1990). He starred on the TV series Chessgame. He appeared in the mini-series All the World's a Stage.

In the Nineties, he appeared in the movies Beltenbros (1991), The Real McCoy (1993), The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994), Tiré à Part (1996), Love Walked In (1997), Bliss (1997), Kiss the Sky (1998), The Limey (1999), Star Wears Episode One -- The Phantom Menace (1999),. Bowfinger (1999), and Red Planet (2000). He was a regular on the TV series The Hunger.

In the Naughts, Terence Stamp was the voice of Jor-El on the TV show Smallville. He appeared in three episodes of His Dark Materials and was a guest voice on Static Shock. He appeared in the films Ma feeme est une actrice (2001), Revelation (2001), Full Frontal (2002), My Boss's Daughter (2003), The Haunted Mansion (2003), Elektra (2005), Separate Lies (2005), Dead Fish (2005), These Foolish Things (2006), September Dawn (2007), Wanted (2008),. Get Smart (2008). Yes Man (2008), and Valkyrie (2008).

In the Teens, Terence Stamp appeared in the movies The Adjustment Bureau (2011), Song for Marion (2012), The Art of the Steal (2013), Big Eyes (2014),. Crow (2016), Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (2016), Bitter Harvest (2017),. Crooked House (2017),. Viking Destiny (2018), and Murder Mystery (2019).  He appeared on television in the TV series His Dark Materials. His last appearance was in the movie Last Night in Soho (2021).

Terence Stamp was an actor of such great talent that to list all of his remarkable performances could easily take a booklet. Over the years, he gave many impressive performances, well beyond those for which he is best known. I have to think Terence Stamp will always be best remembered as General Zod in Superman II by many, and there can be no doubt that it was an incredible performance. Indeed, apart from Heath Ledger's Joker in The Dark Knight, I think Terence Stamp's General Zod may well be the greatest comic book supervillain on film of all time. He was impressive even in his film debut, as the title character in Billy Budd. Billy is innocent and naive to the point that he has difficulties dealing with evil.

Over the years, Terence Stamp would play many other impressive roles. In The Collector he played awkward, lonely butterfly collector  Freddie Clegg who abducts art student Miranda Grey (Samantha Eggar). He was the debauched Shakespearean actor of the title in "Toby Dammit."  In Young Guns he played John Tunstall, the English-born rancher who employed William Bonney AKA Billy the Kid). In The Hit, he played London gangster Willie Parker who betrayed his fellow gangsters in exchange for immunity. He also played a criminal, albeit a much more serious, much grittier one, in The Limey. In The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert he played witty, strong-willed trans woman Bernadette. Terence Stamp could play a wide array of roles, from an innocent like Billy Budd to the worldly but noble John Tunstall to archvillain General Zod. He was quite simply one of the most talented actors of the late 20th and early 21st Centuries. 

Saturday, August 16, 2025

Sunset Boulevard (1950) Turns 75

In 1950 Hollywood took a long, hard look at itself. In a Lonely Place (1950), directed by Nicholas Ray, premiered on May 17 in New York City and starred Humphrey Bogart as dysfunctional, down-on-his-luck screenwriter Dixon Hill. It was on August 10 1950 that an even darker look at Hollywood premiered at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. Sunset Boulevard was directed by Billy Wilder and starred silent film star Gloria Swanson as washed-up silent star Norma Desmond. While some within the industry took offence at the film upon its release (the most famous example being Louis B. Mayer), Sunset Boulevard (1950) received widespread critical acclaim. Sunset Boulevard also proved to be a hit at the box office.

Sunset Boulevard (1950) starred William Holden as washed-up screenwriter Joe Gillis, who finds himself wrapped up in the life of former silent movie star Norma Desmond. Norma, who was at one time a major star, spends her days within her mansion in a fantasy world in which she is still wildly popular. Like many silent movie stars, her mansion is on Sunset Boulevard, hence the name of the film.

As might be expected, the origins of Sunset Boulevard (1950) go back to the history of Sunset Boulevard itself. The history of Sunset Boulevard goes back to the history of Los Angeles itself. It originated in the 1780s as a cattle trail that extended out from the Pueblo de Los Ángeles. Its name, "Sunset Boulevard," first appeared in city street department documents in 1888. One can only assume that it received its name because it heads west, right into the setting sun. Its association with the film industry goes back to 1911, when Nestor Film Company opened its studio on the boulevard. The film industry brought with it money, so that by the 1920s many luxurious houses were built along Sunset Boulevard and around it. The Silent Era during which many luxurious houses were built along Sunset Boulevard would give way to the era of sound film. By the late Forties, some of the most popular silent movie stars were no longer stars, and some of them even lived the lives of recluses. Some, such as Mary Pickford and Pola Negri, lived as recluses. A few, such as Clara Bow and Mae Murray, even suffered from mental disorders.

It was for several years that writer/director Billy Wilder and his writing partner Charles Brackett had been playing with the idea for a movie about a fading silent film star. Originally it was conceived as a light-hearted comedy, but it eventually took a darker direction. Given that the topic of the movie was the film industry itself, the original script was called A Can of Beans to fend off any interference from their studio, Paramount. For basically the same reason they submitted only a few pages of the script to Paramount at a time.

Eventually, Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett ran into problems developing the plot, so they turned to reporter D. M. Marshman, Jr., with whom they played bridge. The writing on Sunset Boulevard was truly collaborative, so it was often hard to determine which writer came up with what. Reportedly, it was D. M. Marshman, Jr. who came up with the idea of the fading silent movie star becoming involved with a younger man. It was also reportedly D. M. Marshman, Jr. who came up with the idea of Joe Gillis being a screenwriter.

As mentioned above, by the late Forties such former silent movie stars as Mary Pickford and Pola Negri had become recluses. Others, such as Clara Bow and Mae Murray, suffered from psychiatric illnesses. There can be no doubt that such legends provided inspiration for Norma Desmond, the former silent star who lives in a fantasy world, convinced that she will soon make her comeback. As to Norma Desmond's name, in Close-up on Sunset Boulevard: Billy Wilder, Norma Desmond, and the Dark Hollywood Dream, author Sam Staggs puts forth the theory that Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett may have been thinking of such "...drug addicted, scandal plagued silent stars Norma Talmadge and Mabel Normand, along with murdered silent film director William Desmond Taylor." In an interview with Anthony Slide on Leonard Maltin's website, D.M. Marshman, Jr. claimed that instead the name was taken from Norma Talmadge and Florence Desmond. Antony Slide pointed out that Florence Desmond had not appeared in silent films, Mr. Marshman said that they thought she had.

Of course, casting would be central to the success of Sunset Boulevard. The book On Sunset Boulevard: The Life and Times of Billy Wilder by Ed Sikov goes into some detail on the casting. Charles Brackett claimed that he and Billy Wilder never considered anyone but Gloria Swanson for the role of Norma Desmond. Billy Wilder remembered that they did consider other actors. When the movie was still conceived as s comedy, Billy Wilder wanted Mae West and Marlon Brando. They also considered Pola Negri, but her Polish accent was much too thick. They visited Mary Pickford, but realised before they even explained the movie to her that she would find the idea of being involved with a younger man insulting. It was friend and fellow director George Cukor who suggested Gloria Swanson.

For the role of Norma Desmond's faithful servant Max, Billy Wilder turned to another fellow director, Erich von Stroheim. In fact, the role was specifically written for him. Gloria Swanson and Erich von Stroheim had worked together before, on the film Queen Kelly. Mr. von Stroheim had been fired from the film due to costs, production delays, and creative differences with star and producer Gloria Swanson. The film was never completed. When a clip from Queen Kelly was shown in Sunset Boulevard as one of Norma Desmond's films, it was the first time any footage of the movie was seen in American movie theatres.

The role of screenwriter Joe Gillis originally went to young actor Montgomery Clift. At that point in his career, he had only appeared in The Search (1948) and Red River (1948). At that point, his third film, The Heiress (1949), was not yet complete. When Billy Wilder offered the role of Gillis to Montgomery Clift, he seemed to be excited about the film. Aside from being an up-and-coming star around whom there was a good deal of excitement, Montgomery Clift certainly had advantages over other actors. He already had a contract with Paramount.. If all had gone according to plan, Mr. Clift would have been paid $5000 a week for twelve weeks.

As it turned out, Montgomery Clift ultimately decided he did not want to do Sunset Boulevard (1950). His excuse was that he had already played a younger man involved with an older woman in The Heiress (1949), and did not want to do it again in Sunset Boulevard (1950). Reportedly, he quit the film only two weeks before shooting was about to start. This brief amount of time forced Billy Wilder to consider other actors already signed to Paramount. Ultimately, the role of Joe Gillis went to William Holden. William Holden had seen success prior to World War II with Golden Boy (1939) and Our Town (1940), but he had only seen a moderate amount of success after the war. William Holden proved to be enthusiastic about the script for Sunset Boulevard and eagerly accepted the role of Joe Gillis.

For the role of production assistant and aspiring screenwriter Betty Schaefer who finds herself entangled with Joe Gillis, Billy Wilder wanted a fresh-faced newcomer for the role He picked Paramount contract player Nancy Olson. At the time she was cast as Betty in Sunset Boulevard, she had only made one film--Canadian Pacific (1949). According to Betty Olson in a recent interview with People, "I remember being very impressed that Billy chose me to play Betty Schaefer, and after a certain point, I realised that he wanted me not to be a character; he wanted me to be myself." Billy Wilder not only wanted Nancy Olson to be herself as Betty, but he even wanted her to wear her own clothes.

Other well-known actors filled the smaller roles in Sunset Boulevard (1950). Character actor Fred Clark played the film producer Shedrake (a name Billy Wilder would use again in The Apartment in 1960 and Kiss Me Stupid in 1964). Character actor Lloyd Gough, who later played Mike Axford on the TV series The Green Hornet, played Joe Gillis's agent Morino. Jack Webb, best known as Sgt. Joe Friday on the radio show and TV show Dragnet, played Joe's friend Artie Green.

Given that Sunset Boulevard (1950) is set in Hollywood and is centred on a fading silent movie star, it should come as no surprise that a who's who of Hollywood notables appear in the film. This is particularly true of the famous scene in which Norma plays bridge with friends. While Norma's friends in the scene have traditionally been termed "waxworks," their careers were actually healthier than Norma's career at the time, even if they were no longer the huge stars they once were. Buster Keaton's career was undergoing a revival even as Sunset Boulevard (1950) was released. In 1949 James Agee had written an article on silent comedians for Life magazine. The article revived interest in Buster Keaton and other silent comedians, so that his films were being screened again and Mr. Keaton began appearing on television and in movies. H. B. Warner had played Jesus Christ in the 1927 version of The King of Kings. Although a character actor rather than a star, his career was still strong in the Forties, appearing in the movies Topper Returns (1941), High Wall (1947), and, most notably It's a Wonderful Life (1946). Like H. B. Warner, Anna Q. Nilsson was no longer a big name, but still had a successful career. In the Forties alone she appeared in such films as The Farmer's Daughter (1947) and Adam's Rib (1949). Other famous names appearing in the movie were gossip columnist Hedda Hopper as herself, composer Jay Livingston as a pianist at a party, and, perhaps most famous of them all, director Cecil B. DeMille as himself.

The cinematographer on Sunset Boulevard (1950) was John F. Seitz, with whom Billy Wilder had worked before. John F. Seitz had shot Five Graves to Cairo (1943), Double Indemnity (1944), and The Lost Weekend (1945). The costume designer on Sunset Boulevard (1950) was none other than the legendary Edith Head, who had worked with Billy Wilder multiple times and would work with him again multiple times.

In the movie, Norma Desmond lives at 10086 Sunset Boulevard. In actuality, the house that serves as the exterior of Norma's home in Sunset Boulevard (1950) was at 641 S. Irving Boulevard and stood at the corner of Irving and Wilshire Boulevard. It had been built between 1922 and 1923 for businessman William O. Jenkins. In 1936 it was sold to oil magnate J. Paul Getty. One of Mr. Gerry's former wives was still living in the mansion at the time that Sunset Boulevard was filmed. Before she would let Paramount rent the property, they had to agree to build her a new swimming pool. The mansion would later appear in the Warner Bros. movie Rebel Without a Cause. Unfortunately, the property would be sold in 1957 and it would be torn down to make way for the office building known as the Tidewater Oil Building. It was art director Hans Dreier who was responsible for the over-the-top opulence of Norma Desmond's mansion. His career went back to the Silent Era in Germany, and he had worked on such films as A Farewell to Arms (1932), The Lady Eve (1941), and Holiday Inn (1942). He had worked with Billy Wilder before, on the films Five Graves to Cairo (1943), Double Indemnity (1944), The Lost Weekend (1945), The Emperor Waltz (1948), and A Foreign Affair (1948).

The William O. Jenkins house wasn't the only famous Los Angeles landmark to appear in Sunset Boulevard (1950). Sadly, some of the other landmarks, like the William O. Jenkins house, no longer exist. The legendary Schwab's Pharmacy, which was at 8024 Sunset Boulevard, appears in the film. It closed in 1983 and was demolished in 1988 to make way for a shopping centre. Bullocks Wilshire also appears in the shopping sequence. It was a men's clothing store that was open for more than sixty years. The building still stands and is being used by the Southwestern Law School. Across the street in the shopping scene can be seen Perino's Restaurant, which was at 3927 Wiltshire. It closed in 1986 and was demolished in 2005. Other famous locations appearing in Sunset Boulevard (1950) were the Bel-Air Country Club, Griffith Park, and the corner of Hollywood & Vine. The Alto Nito Apartments where Joe Gillis lived still stand and one can still rent an apartment there.

Of course, since the film industry was at the heart of Sunset Boulevard (1950), the Paramount lot played a big role in the film. Indeed, the scenes of Joe Gillis and Betty Shaefer on the studio backlot actually were filmed on the Paramount backlot. The writer's offices in the movie were the Dreier Building on the Paramount lot, which had been both designed and named for art director Hans Dreier years before the movie was made. As might be expected, Paramount's famed Bronson Gate, the main entrance to the studio for years, also appears in the film.

Principal filming on Sunset Boulevard (1950) took place from April 11 to June 18 1949. While the beginning of Sunset Boulevard (1950) is one of the most famous beginnings of a movie of all time, originally it had a completely different beginning. Originally Sunset Boulevard (1950) began with Joe Gillis's corpse being taken to the morgue, where it speaks to other corpses. Charles Brackett hated the original opening, and thought of it as "morbid and disgusting." As it turned out, audiences did not care for the original opening of Sunset Boulevard (1950) either. The first preview screening of Sunset Boulevard (1950) was held in Evanston, Illinois, where the audience reacted to the film's opening sequence with laughter. A second preview screening in Poughkeepsie, New York had the same result. A third preview screening in Great Neck, Long Island also went poorly.

With three preview screenings having gone badly, Paramount postponed the release of Sunset Boulevard (1950) and Billy Wilder jettisoned the original opening of the film for the one for which it would become famous. More preview screenings of the film would then be held, this time in the Los Angeles area. Unlike the initial previews, these screenings received overall positive reactions. When another screening was held in the Midwest, this time in Detroit, the audience's reactions were more favourable.

It was on August 10 1950 that Sunset Boulevard (1950) premiered at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. It received an overly positive notice from New York Times critic Thomas M. Pryor, who ended his review with, "Make no mistake about it. Sunset Boulevard is a motion picture classic." Later, on August 27 1950, Bosley Crowther, the New York Times' chief critic who could at times be hard to please, also gave Sunset Boulevard (1950) appears to have liked Sunset Boulevard, ending his review with, "As a study of greed and frustration, of change and decay, this film is tops." The critics at The New York Times weren't alone in their praise for the film. The film also received positive reviews from The New York Herald-Tribune and The New York Journal-American. Sunset Boulevard (1950) proved to be a hit with audiences at Radio City Music Hall. Bosley Crowther in his review noted "...the swarms of eager patrons which it is now drawing to the Music Hall."

Sunset Boulevard
(1950) opened elsewhere in the United States later that month. In Los Angeles, it opened at the Paramount's downtown and Hollywood theatres on August 24 1950. While this was not the case with either Paramount or RKO theatres, some theatres elected to show Sunset Boulevard (1950) together with another movie critical of Hollywood, In a Lonely Place (1950), as a double feature. An example of this was the Lux Theatre in Oakland, California.

Sunset Boulevard (1950) received largely positive reviews beyond New York City. In the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, Herbert L Monk wrote of the film, "Bizarre is the word for much of what goes on in Sunset Boulevard. But it's all quite fascinating." The Hollywood Reporter praised the film, noting, "All their previous and distinguished work seems now to be but dress rehearsals for this triumph of motion picture craftsmanship." Both Good Housekeeping and Look praised Gloria Swanson's performance. There were a few detractors. The New Yorker gave the film a bad review, referring to it as "pretentious." One person who detested the film was MGM head Louis B. Mayer, who told Billy Wilder, "You have disgraced the industry that made and fed you! You should be tarred and feathered and run out of Hollywood!"According to Nancy Olson, Billy Wilder's response to Mr. Mayer was simply, "Go f*** yourself." Darryl Zanuck of 20th Century Fox apparently did not think highly of Sunset Boulevard (1950) either. He claimed, "Sunset Boulevard was a masterpiece until it was released throughout the country and failed to do business. It's not so big a masterpiece today."

As it turns out, Darryl Zanuck was wrong on more than one count. The budget for Sunset Boulevard (1950) came out to $1,572,000. It made $2,350,000 in the United States alone. It was then not only a hit with critics, but a hit with audiences as well. Arguably, Sunset Boulevard (1950) was indeed a masterpiece that did well across the country. Not only was Sunset Boulevard (1950) a hit with critics and audiences, but it turned out that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences loved the film as well. It was nominated for eleven Academy Awards and was the only the fifth movie to receive nominations in every single acting category. Unfortunately, it would also be the second film to be nominated in every single acting category not to win any of them (My Man Godfrey was the first). Ultimately, Sunset Boulevard (1950) only won two Oscars out of its eleven nominations: Best Story and Screenplay and Best Art Direction – Black-and-White. As much of a classic as Sunset Boulevard (1950) has come to be regarded, it was released in a year full of classics, including All About Eve (1950), Born Yesterday (1950), Cyrano de Bergerac (1950), Harvey (1950), and The Third Man (1950), among others.

After having worked together on thirteen films, Sunset Boulevard (1950) would be the last movie on which Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett collaborated. While they no longer worked together they would remain friends. Neither Billy Wilder nor Charles Brackett's careers suffered from the split. Billy Wilder would go on to make such classics as Sabrina (1954), Some Like It Hot (1959), The Apartment (1960), and yet others. Charles Brackett wrote the screenplays for such films as Niagara (1953), Titanic (1953), and The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing (1955).

Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett would face accusations that they had plagiarised the script for Sunset Boulevard (1950). A former accountant for Paramount, Stephanie Joan Carlson, claimed that between 1943 and 1947 she had written a series of stories, some fictional and some based on fact, about life at the studio. She further claimed that she had submitted these stories to Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett and that Sunset Boulevard (1950) resembled a story called "Past Performance" in particular. She sued Messrs. Wilder and Brackett as well as Paramount for $100,000 in general damages, $250,000 in exemplary damages, and $750,000 based on the movie's box office profits. On top of all this was thrown in an extra $350,000. After two and a half years, Stephanie Joan Carlson's lawsuit was dismissed. Another plagiarism lawsuit was filed by playwright Edna Buckler against Paramount Pictures in 1954. It was thrown out the following year.

Sunset Boulevard (1950) would have such a lasting impact that it has been referenced and parodied in movies and television shows ever since its release. Perhaps the most famous parody of all time was a sketch on the 14th episode of the fifth season of The Carol Burnett Show titled "Sunnyset Boulevard." Carol Burnett played an even more demented Nora Desmond, while Harvey Korman played her butler Max. It proved so popular that it led to a series of recurring sketches on the show. Sunset Boulevard (1950) has also been spoofed on such shows as 3rd Rock from the Sun, Tiny Toon Adventures, Archer, and others. Sunset Boulevard (1950) has served as a source of inspiration for yet other films and TV shows, including Sweet Bird of Youth (1962), The Oscar (1966), Valley of the Dolls (1957), The Legend of Lylah Clare (1968), Soapdish (1991), Gods and Monsters (1998), Mulholland Drive (2001), and yet others. The classic episode of The Twilight Zone "The Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine" owes a good deal to Sunset Boulevard (1950). In the episode, Ida Lupino played fading movie star Barbara Jean Trenton, who like Norma Desmond lives in the past. Both the television shows Twin Peaks and Desperate Housewives referenced Sunset Boulevard (1950) on a regular basis.

Of course, as strange as it may seem, there is also a stage musical based on the film. Attempts to adapt Sunset Boulevard (1950) as a musical actually began when the film was only a few years old. Cabaret singer and pianist Dickson Hughes and actor Richard Wyler approached Gloria Swanson about appearing in a musical revue they had written, About Time. This led to the three of them working on an adaptation of Sunset Boulevard (1950) initially titled Starring Norma Desmond and then The Boulevard! from 1952 to 1956. Any hopes for the musical were dashed when Paramount withdrew their permission in the late Fifties. Material from the musical would later be used in 1994 by Dickson Hughes in his musical Swanson on Sunset, which was based on his experience working with the star.

It was also in the early 1950s that Stephen Sondheim considered a musical adaptation of Sunset Boulevard (1950), even writing the first scene with librettist Burt Shevelove. He aborted his plans after running into Billy Wilder at a party, who told him it would work much better as an opera. Hal Prince would later approach Stephen Sondheim about a musical adaptation of Sunset Boulevard. He declined Hal Prince's proposal, giving this earlier conversation with Billy Wilder as the reason. Later Hal Prince approached John Kander and Fred Ebb. Discussions with Hal Prince fell apart.

It would be Andrew Lloyd Weber who would finally mount a successful musical adaptation of Sunset Boulevard (1950). It had book and lyrics by Don Black and Christopher Hampton, and music by Andrew Lloyd Webber. It opened on July 12 1993 on the West End of London, with Patti LuPone as Norma Desmond. It has since been produced in Los Angeles, on Broadway, and in various touring productions. It has also seen revivals on the West End and Broadway since then.

Sunset Boulevard (1950) revitalised William Holden's career as he began getting better parts. He would go on to appear in such films as Executive Suite (1955), The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), The Wild Bunch (1969), and Network (1976). Among his successes were further collaborations with Billy Wilder: Stalag 17 (1953), for which he won the Oscar for Best Actor; Sabrina (1954), and Fedora (1978). Sunset Boulevard (1950) would not revive Gloria Swanson's film career, it would guarantee her lasting fame. While she made only three movies after Sunset Boulevard (1950), she made several guest appearances on television shows, including Dr. Kildare, Burke's Law, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, and The Beverly Hillbilies, among other. From 1954 to 1955 she hosted Crown Theatre with Gloria Swanson. She guest starred on The Carol Burnett Show in its seventh season, where she got to play Charlie Chaplin in a sketch. Nancy Olson would not become a movie star due to Sunset Boulevard (1950), but she would have a good career, appearing in such films as Pollyanna (1960), The Absent-Minded Professor (1961), and Airport 1975 (1974). She was a regular on the shows Kingston Confidential and Paper Dolls.

Sunset Boulevard (1950) was one of the last films to be shot on cellulose nitrate. While cellulose nitrate produced vivid black-and-white images, it was also very flammable and so it was abandoned and replaced by cellulose acetate, Unfortunately, cellulose nitrate also tends to decompose. For this reason most of the prints of Sunset Boulevard (1950) were in very poor condition. It was then that Paramount launched an effort to restore the film digitally. Prior to the restoration, it had been released on Betamax, Laserdisc in 1984, and VHS in 1984. The newly restored version would be released on DVD in 2002. It would be restored digitally again in 2012 for its release on Blu-Ray.

Such is the stature of Sunset Boulevard (1950) that it was among the first movies included in the National Film Registry in 1989, which includes films deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States. Library of Congress. In 1998, it was ranked no. 12 by the American Film Institute in their list AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies, which included the greatest American films of all time. In Sight and Sound's 2022 list of the Greatest Films of All Time it was ranked at no. 78. Sunset Boulevard (1950) regularly ranks on lists of the greatest movies of all time, and it remains one of the most quoted movies of all time as well (particularly Norma's line, "All right, Mr. DeMille, I'm ready for my close-up"). Sunset Boulevard (1950) remains one of the best loved films of all time and is still regarded as one of the greatest movies of all time. Chances are good that even the average person will know the film 75 years from now.

Thursday, August 14, 2025

"Angel Baby" by Rosie and The Originals

Yesterday I wrote about Rosie Hamlin. Here is the song for which she is best known, "Angel Baby" by Rosie & The Originals. It is regarded as a classic to this day.

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Rosie Hamlin: Chicana Rock 'n' Roll Pioneer

When people think of Chicano pioneers in rock 'n' roll, Ritchie Valens is probably the first to come to mind. Not as well known is a Chicana who wrote and performed one of the most successful singles of the early rock 'n' roll era. "Angel Baby" peaked at no. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1961 and spent 13 weeks on the chart. It also peaked at no. 5 on the Billboard R&B chart and spent eight weeks there. "Angel Baby" was written by Rosie Hamlin and she performed the song with her group Rosie and The Originals. 

Rosie Hamlin was born on July 21 1945 in Klamath Falls, Oregon. Her mother was Mexican while her father was an American of English descent. She spent much of her childhood in Alaska before her family moved to California. She came from a musical family. Her father played guitar. Her grandfather played banjo and harmonica. She began her music career when she was very young. She was only 13 when she started singing with a Country & Western band. It was in 1960 that her mother bought her a piano and her aunt began teaching her to play it.

Rosie Hamlin was only 14 years old when she wrote "Angel Baby" as a poem for her very first boyfriend. It was when she was 15 years old that she and some friends rented the only recording studio near San Diego, California where they lived, a studio in San Marcos, California. It was owned by an airplane mechanic who had converted part of his hangar into a recording studio. "Angel Baby" was originally recorded on a two-track machine. Because of this any time someone made a mistake, they had to start all over from the beginning. It took thirty times or more for them to get "Angel Baby" done the way they wanted it. 

Rosie and The Originals could not interest a record label in "Angel Baby." She finally took one of their 45s to Kresge's Department Store in San Diego and asked the manager if he could include the song in the listening booths in the store. The song turned out to be so popular with teenagers at Kresge's that it eventually attracted the attention of a scout from Highland Records, who offered Rosie and The Originals a recording contract.

Rosie and The Originals would follow "Angel Baby" up with two more singles, "Lonely Blue Nights" and "Why Did You Leave Me," neither of which met with success. The group disbanded, and Rosie Hamlin recorded an album with guitarist Noah Tafolla for Brunswick Records. Rosie Hamlin and Noah Tafolla eventually married and had two children. She retired from singing in 1963 to raise her family.

Rosie Hamlin would eventually return to performing. She recorded singles in 1969 and 1973. Rosie & The Originals would also release the album Steppin' Out in Style in 2000. In 2002 Rosie Hamlin released the album Angel Baby Revisited, which included a Spanglish version of "Angel Baby."

While Rosie Hamlin's recording career did not last long, she would have a lasting impact. She was the first Chicana and hence the first Latina to ever appear on American Bandstand. She was also the first Chicana and hence the first Latina to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Her song "Angel Baby" has become a classic and has been recorded by such artists as John Lennon (who counted Rosie Hamlin among his favourite artists), Kathy Young, Linda Ronstadt, Jenni Rivera, and others. Rosie Hamlin was a true pioneer, the very first Chicana to have a hit record, who paved the way for all Chicano artists ever since.